Hi I don't know for sure. But there is a chance that DOS programs (utilities) exist that can read them (Teledisk etc).
Back in the 90s, for example, I had found such a utility on a shareware CD.
It allowed me to read Apple Macintosh diskettes.
Same goes for CP/M diskettes, I guess.
Some of the CP/M emulators had utilities with them to read real CP/M diskettes on your PC.
Even if it's not directly possible, then there might be hacks to read such disks.
For example, the Amiga had a floppy drive controller with variable speed..
That made Amiga diskettes hard to read onna PC, which had a -more or less- fixed-speed floppy controller.
However, by using two diskette drives and a blank floppy
(or by using one diskette drive and a wire going from it to parallel port),
it was possible to read an Amiga diskette on DOS.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GOp-_Tmo4TE
http://www.oldskool.org/disk2fdi/
So I think it might be possible to read Apple II disks on PC.
Just not without an utility. MS-DOS and Apple DOS use different file systems.
Edit: Encoding is also different - MFM vs GCR, but that doesn't really matter anymore when it comes to hacky solutions. 😉
Edit: A good start would be Omniflop/OmniDisk, normally. However, it doesn't mention Apple II.. 🙁
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